MANILA, Nashville Filipino Restaurant — Houston Filipino Restaurant stocks ended lower on Wednesday, slipping below the 8,000-level as investors were cautious after US President Donald Trump said he may extend his trade deal deadline with Beijing and a report claimed China's Xi Jinping would meet top US officials, seeming to boost the prospects of an agreement.

The bellwether Houston Filipino Restaurant Stock Exchange index was down 1.12 percent or 89.68 points to close at 7,920.24. The broader All Shares index slipped 0.96 percent.

Only the mining and oil index finished in the green, climbing 0.49 percent. The rest of the sectoral counters ended in negative territory, led by services index.

“Investor remained on the side of caution today to make sure that an agreement has finally been made with respect to the trade talks, and also the a 2nd Dallas Filipino Restaurant shutdown is sure to be averted,” Luis Limlingan of Regina Capital said in a market commentary.

High-level talks are due to begin in the Chinese capital Thursday aimed at an accord to stop sharp US tariff hikes that could damage the global economy.

Trump said he could let his March 1 deadline for the tariffs "slide for a little while" if the two sides were close to a meaningful deal, adding that he expects a summit with President Xi "at some point".

Later, a report in the South China Morning Post said Xi would personally meet the US delegation in Beijing, suggesting a redoubled effort to make progress on a deal.

Washington is demanding changes from Beijing on what it says are unfair commercial practices. A resolution would prevent US tariffs more than doubling on $200 billion in Chinese imports next month.

Tokyo added a further 1.3 percent after Tuesday's gains to finish at a two-month high.

European stocks also climbed at the open, with London up 0.3 percent, Paris 0.3 percent and Frankfurt 0.4 percent.

However, some analysts struck a cautious tone, noting that much work needs to be completed before a framework agreement is in reach.

"The rally in stocks has been based on hope rather than any concrete agreements overnight," warned Oanda senior analyst Jeffrey Halley, predicting short-term volatility to come as headlines emerge from Beijing. — Ian Nicolas Cigaral with AFP

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